| Literature DB >> 22514689 |
Abdelmajid Eloualid1, Houria Rhaissi, Ahmed Reguig, Safaa Bounaceur, Brahim El Houate, Omar Abidi, Majida Charif, Noureddine Louanjli, Elbakkay Chadli, Abdelhamid Barakat, Anu Bashamboo, Ken McElreavey, Hassan Rouba.
Abstract
Infertility affects around 1 in 10 men and in most cases the cause is unknown. The Y chromosome plays an important role in spermatogenesis and specific deletions of this chromosome, the AZF deletions, are associated with spermatogenic failure. Recently partial AZF deletions have been described but their association with spermatogenic failure is unclear. Here we screened a total of 339 men with idiopathic spermatogenic failure, and 256 normozoospermic ancestry-matched men for chromosome microdeletions including AZFa, AZFb, AZFc, and the AZFc partial deletions (gr/gr, b1/b3 and b2/b3).AZFa and AZFc deletions were identified in men with severe spermatogenic failure at similar frequencies to those reported elsewhere. Gr/gr deletions were identified in case and control populations at 5.83% and 6.25% respectively suggesting that these deletions are not associated with spermatogenic failure. However, b2/b3 deletions were detected only in men with spermatogenic failure and not in the normospermic individuals. Combined with our previous data this shows an association of the b2/b3 deletion (p = 0.0318) with spermatogenic failure in some populations. We recommend screening for this deletion in men with unexplained spermatogenic failure.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22514689 PMCID: PMC3325924 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0034902
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Classification of case and control cohorts according to WHO criteria and incidence of Y chromosome microdeletions.
| Group | Phenotype | N° | WHO criteria | Intact Y chromosome | AZF deletion (n) | gr/gr partial deletion | b2/b3 partial deletion | b1/b3 partial deletion | Partial deletion and associated Y chromosome haplogroup |
|
| non-obstructive azoospermia | 88 | no sperm in the ejaculate | 80 | AZFa (1), AZFc (3), AZFa+b (2), AZFa+b+c (2) | 2 (2.5%) | - | 1 (1.25%) | gr/gr, E3b2 n = 1; E3 (xE3b2), n = 1; b1/b3, E3b2 n = 1 |
| Oligozoospermia | 12 | <5×106 sperm/ml | 11 | AZFc (1) | - | - | - | ||
| Oligoasthenozoospermia | 11 | <5×106 sperm/ml and >40% of sperm have low motility | 11 | - | 1 (9.09%) | - | - | gr/gr, F, n = 1 | |
| Oligoteratozoospermia | 7 | <5×106 sperm/ml and >40% of sperm with abnormal morphology | 7 | - | - | - | - | - | |
| Oligoasthenoteratozoospermia | 61 | 5×106 sperm/ml, >40% of sperm have low motility and >40% of sperm with abnormal morphology | 57 | AZFc (4) | 6 (10.53%) | 4 (7.02%) | - | gr/gr E3b2, n = 5 b2/b3 E3b2, n = 2 J, n = 1 | |
|
| Oligozoospermia | 20 | <20×106 sperm/ml | 20 | - | - | - | - | - |
| Oligoasthenozoospermia | 12 | <20×106 sperm/ml and >40% of sperm have low motility | 12 | - | 1 (8.33%) | - | - | - | |
| Oligoteratozoospermia | 3 | <20×106 sperm/ml and >40% of sperm with abnormal morphology | 3 | - | - | - | - | - | |
| Oligoasthenoteratozoospermia | 22 | <20×106 sperm/ml, >40% of sperm have low motility and >40% of sperm with abnormal morphology | 22 | - | 2 (9.09%) | - | 1 (4.54%) | gr/gr E3b2, n = 1 F, n = 1 b1/b3 E3b2, n = 1 | |
| Asthenozoospermia | 61 | >40% of sperm have low motility | 61 | - | 5 (8.19%) | - | - | gr/gr, E3b2 n = 4 | |
| Teratozoospermia | 19 | >40% of sperm with abnormal morphology | 19 | - | 1 (5.26%) | - | - | - | |
| Asthenoteratozoospermia | 23 | >40% of sperm have low motility and >40% of sperm with abnormal morphology | 23 | - | 1 (4.34%) | - | - | - | |
| Normospermic | 256 | 256 | - | 16 (6.25%) | - | - | gr/gr E3b2, n = 9 E (xE3b2), n = 2 J, n = 1 | ||
|
| 595 | 582 | 13 | 35 | 4 | 2 | |||
Y chromosome haplogroup is indicated for 31 samples with partial AZFc deletions.